You might be interested in Walter Lindrum . World Billiard Champion from 1933 until he retired in 1950 . The bloke was that good they changed the rules because of him.
I may possibly played it decades ago in Roemond, Netherlands and seen similar tables around Viersen in Germany (Dutch Border), along with a Billiard type game with 'Bouncy Mushrooms' in the centre of the table, also with no pockets.
@@johnp8131 i played a game in Italy with skittles, pockets with shutters, and no cues...you launched the ball with your hand, off the far cushion and tried to get nearest the white (it was a mix between crown green bowling, but with a bounce element, 10-pin bowling, and pool)
Decades ago (whilst still young), my father bought a 2nd hand snooker table. He proceeded to teach us kids snooker and billiards and we struggled mightily against him especially when playing billiards. He seemed just to be able to wander around blithely scoring mega points off cannons. What he'd forgotten to mention to us was that, whilst in the army, he'd become the army northern area billiards champion...
Yes! Back in the day, many army messes, across the ranks, had snooker tables, and both games were played. I know my dad spent many happy hours playing both games. Your dad must have put in a lot of practice, and been a champion of tactics.
@@tallthinkevThe White Horse in Hertford, Herts had one in an upstairs room but it seemed to be more popular in Cambridgeshire. Back in the eighties and nineties I can think of three pubs in St Ives, Cambs that had them. Two have closed down but the Nelson's Head may still have theirs somewhere?
Haven’t seen bar billiards since the 1990s. Back then loads of pubs in Southampton had them. Especially the smaller venues where space was limited. Great game.
There is a form where the two cue balls are both WHITE, but one of them has a Black Dot on it, to distinguish it from the other, whilst the third ball is BLACK. I never heard of this trio of colours before and I started playing in my teens, in the eaarly 70’s. What blows my mind about Billiards is that the top players were known for running up scores in the THOUSANDS, with breaks (turns) that could last hours long. Learning how to sink your cue ball off one of the others teaches you how to avoid doing this in games like Pool or Snooker. Learning to use light power on the cue ball and yet produce spin, which is an essential skill in Billiards, adds to your abilities in the other games as well of course. You should look up footage of Billiards masters like Walter Lindrum and Eddie Charlton online. They will absolutely bow your mind!
You need to remember that during the era of Walter Lindrum, TVs were in black & white and colours like red and yellow were not very easy to distinguish in greyscale, hence the spotted cue ball and the black object ball.
English Billiards was the first cue sport game. The guys in the video are professionals. Steve Mifsud, wearing the purple shirt, is the current Australian Champion in both English Billiards and Snooker. He smashed me 850 to 80 in the first round of the Australian Open in 2023. Robby Foldvari, a good freind of mine, is a 3 time World Champion of English Billiards and won International Snooker titles, he has also won 8-ball, 9-ball and 10-ball championships and Captained the Australian team. Both players live in Melbourne.
Great video! I really enjoy the videos of you playing snooker as well. I hope you make more of them. It will take some time before you improve your play and strategy but you can start with the following principles in order of importance: 1. ALWAYS try to predict/influence where the cue ball will end up. You will not improve until you constantly have that in mind on EVERY shot! Experiment with different spins, angles, elevation and power to get more knowledge about the amazing things you can get the cue ball to do. Over time you will have the knowledge and experience to employ the right shot for the situation at hand. 2. It is too soon to think multiple shots in advance like pros do but start with thinking 1 shot in advance. On your current shot always think about the next shot after you pot and do your best to "set it up". Once you get the hang of it start thinking 2 shots in advance then 3,4 etc. 3. If you do not have a clear pot and/or streak of pots (Break) it is ALWAYS better to make a safety shot in a way that when the opponent comes to the table he has no shot or a very difficult shot which could force a mistake (hide the cue ball/object ball or at the very least put distance between them) 4. Take on pots that give you a chance to continue potting. Sometimes that means going for lower value colors but having an easy shot after that and continuing your break instead of going for higher value colors but having no shot after you pot. Follow these principles as best as you can (especially the first one) and you will start improving quickly.
Breaks of over 1000 pts are not uncommon. The record Break is 4,137 pts (1900 consecutive scoring shots) and the guy that did that Break holds the record for the fastest Century Break also at 46 seconds. he's called Walter Lindrum.
There was a break of nearly 500,000 was recorded many years ago lasting 5 days.This led to a changing of the rules banning what was called the cradle cannon.
Love billiards , more complex than it looks.When in the snooker hall I will always finish my session with a game if billiards and much to my amusement a lot of snooker players have no idea what I am doing.
@@souptec I didn't put that in because it was an unoffical record played in an exhibition game, whereas the score I mentioned was recognised having being made in an offical match.
Billiards in my opinion is a far better game than the other cue sports. But I’m biased as I’ve played many World Billiard tour events over the years and run our local league. Glad you enjoyed your little intro 👍
Did you take a look at the original Billiard style, called Carambole Billiard, yet? Its another, very old type of billiard, with the main difference that the table has no pockets. There are 3 different larger balls, and you always have to touch the other 2 in each shot: Very hard, and requires a lot of experience, to make the best use of the cushions to get the cue ball go where you want it. Also very strategic.
There is also French billiards which is played with three balls, but there are no pockets. The game consists of touching the white ball and that of the opponent with your ball. The rules differ but the game is also difficult.
It’s popular in Asia as well, particularly Vietnam, most likely an influence from the French occupation of the region back in the day (also why there’s a strong French influence in Vietnamese food). In “Little Saigon” in Las Vegas there’s a billiards hall that has a few regular pool tables and a whole line of carom tables. We visited one time (my son is fascinated with billiards) and we were mesmerized watching these old Asian guys playing carom with absolute ease.
Used to play Billiards with my Father back in the seventies onwards. We would play one frame of Snooker and then finish off with Billiards as we would have 45 minutes allocated to the table as it was usually insufficient time for two frames of Snooker? Usually both players have their own cue ball, one plain white and the other white with a small black spot on it and one red impact/object ball. The yellow cue ball seems to be a newish thing? Seen Billiards in the Netherlands, Germany etc on a smaller table (large pool table size) with no pockets and another in the Netherlands with immoveable cushioned pegs in the middle that the balls bounce off! Cannons only one would presume? We also have 'Bar Billiards' in the UK, which you should take a look at. The 'Bar' is a timed stop bar, that stops the impact balls returning after a timed period. The cue ball returns as it's fractionally smaller, as on most pool tables. Played very gently with ultra tight round 'Pockets' and 'Mushroom' shaped pegs which can be knocked over for penalties. Rare to see these in pubs today, back in the eighties it was quite popular in some Counties around London and there were many Bar Billiards inter pub competitions. May be an Idea to look at 'British Pub Games', which isn't just Pool and Darts, even today?
I was going to say the same, never seen a Yellow Cue Ball. We used to play (occasionally) on a snooker table. It had the standard Snooker balls, PLUS a second Cue ball that had a spot. To play Billiards you took one red, the Cue Ball and the Second Cue Ball (with the spot). I didn't play it much, so never really got into the scoring or that skill of placing balls correctly, though I imagine if you were resonable at Billiards, then you would have the skill to play Snooker better, being able to place the balls where you wanted them with more skill. Some of the older Snooker players when it became popular on TV were mostly Billiard players I believe which was why they were so good. - I suppose if you think about it, if you only have Snooker balls then you can still play Billiards, just use the Red, White, and Yellow balls. I seem to remember that often when playing Snooker, we would "string" for Break rather than tossing a coin
Dave Causier is great to watch when it comes to top-class English billiards. Plays at less than 10 seconds a shot, and is one of the best players in the world.
This is the game I first learned (from an old guy aged 91) back when I was at junior prep in the 1950s. Back then, though, there was no yellow cue ball. There was a red ball, a white cue ball, and a spot cue ball (white with a little black dot). This game was popular during the Raj, where my grampa learned it at the United Services Club in Shimla.
The demonstration is with Robbie Folvari who has been atop snooker and billiards player, was Billiards World Champion, the other player is Steve Mifsud multiple Australian and Oceania champion snooker player.
Billiards is the original of all these table ball games. Snooker was created by troops in British India to add excitement to the game, because they decided Billiards was too slow. Snooker halls in the UK are usually called Billiard halls, with Billiards tables, on which Snooker, or Billiards, may be played. As with most games & sports invented in the UK, the Americans had to devise a simpler version, so they created 8 ball Pool, on a much smaller table, that doesn't require the skill or finesse of Snooker, & they certainly don't seem to have had the patience for Billiards. Baseball was based on the schoolyard game of Rounders, which never had an adult version in the UK, but was played by children instead of the adult game of Cricket. The American Colonists did play Cricket, taken as part of British culture, but as the ground for a good wicket pitch has to be carefully prepared, it was easier to arrange a Rounders field, where this is less critical, because the ball is not bounced in bowling as it is in cricket, & the scoring of runs is much more straight-forward. This origin can just still be seen by the fact that the distance between Bases is the same as that between Wickets in Cricket, that is1Chain, or 22 yards. The need for easy setup was especially true during the Civil War, where games were quickly arranged in mobile Army camps. So Rounders, renamed at some time Base Ball became the preferred summer game in the US. American Football is a version of English Rugby, heavily regulated & formalized so as to have almost totally wrecked the game, taking out the spontaneousness & excitement, to replace it with stop-start set plays. I have no idea why regular football never took root in the US, it is just strange. It may be, as in the UK, that all these games were the pastimes of the wealth leisured classes, mostly come out of the private schools, where the rules & regulation developed, while football was a more informal, less disciplined sport of the working man, so to be shunned by those who had the means to create officially sanctioned gentlemanly pursuits. Only Basketball appears to have been a game created from scratch in the US, with all others coming out of the UK, or other countries.
Snooker hall's in the UK are generally called 'snooker clubs' and I have never seen anyone play billiards in one, hardly anyone plays billiards in the UK, it's more popular in places like Pakistan these days.
You need to get some old footage of the great Joe Davies and his brother, but Joe was world champion at both Snooker and Billiards the ultimate days of the gentleman’s sport, Joe one of the most famous players of his generation, but also known by every snooker player!
In Europe and many other countries in the world, the traditional form of biljard is played with three ball but with no holes at the sides. The player has to hit the other two balls with his ball. If he misses, his opponent can play for points. There’s a variant, which is more difficult but much more interesting to watch, is where your ball has to hit the other two balls but before your balls hits the last ball, your ball must have hit at least three different sides I played both variants a lot.
Interestingly all these games are derived from skittles (an early form of bowling still played today in pubs, but in the Middle Ages more commonly in church!) The green baize cloth on a snooker table is a reminder of the grass outside, i.e. the tabletop games were invented so people could keep playing indoors during cold winters. Pockets eventually came about because they were easier than putting pins to hit on an indoor table. Interestingly bagatelle, pinball and pachinko are all also derived from billiards; bizarrely, the French in the 18th century called bagatelle "Japanese billiards", just because 'Japanese' meant 'exotic, new, funky' and then centuries later the real Japanese go mad for pachinko, a derivative of it via America!
I grew up playing English 8 Ball Pool. That will be a good game for you to look at too. Especially Blackball rules events and international rules events. I play Blackball internationally for Wales. I also played Chinese Pool now known as Heyball. Also another great cue sport.. I took up snooker last year and love it. Played 1 season for a team in the league and made a singles final in my first Snooker season. And also recently started playing English Billiards and got my first tournament in July at Billiards. I love all Cue sports.
Great comments. Decades ago we had a 12x6 table in our lunch room. Most of us played snooker and billiards. Was a great experience. I most to a different location ,no table.
When I was quite young, my friend's dad had a half size table, which had covers so it could be used as the dining table too. We played billiards a lot (two white balls, one with a spot) as it was some time later that they got a set of snooker balls. Some shots were tricky because the room was quite small, and other furniture got in the way of the blunt end of the cue.
Walter Lindrum was generally regarded as the best ever "Billiards" (the full size English table variety) player. He was so good, they had to change the rules in an effort to stop his dominance of the game. It didn't work though. Check out the Lindrum documentary here on You Tube if you have time.
Also they used to play to a point value of like 500 . They also used to be able to trap the two object balls in the pocket mouth and play countless cannons off them . Fred Davis and Harold Lindrum where multiple World Champions . Watch some of the old black and white footage of them playing you will be amazed at the speed they played at . They show how simple but skilled based the game is . Knowing how much side spin or top or bottom or a combination of them to pocket and position your opponents ball and the red where you can score the most with the least amount of effort . Soft gentle shots will always help but you will rarely hit it hard .
I am 76 now. 60 years ago or more I spent many happy hours at Elizabeth House in Hurlock Street, Highbury, Isl;ington playing billiards. We weren't sure of the rules but did the best we could. I'm delighted to see that they are still going strong. The Youth Club is free for all young people aged 11 to 18 although the hours seem a bit more limited than before.
The thing about Billiards is that you learn what is in off with the cue ball . The game of snooker and pool becomes so much easier because you know when the ball will travel into the pocket . I played competition Billiards and Snooker and my snooker game was so much better because you know how the cue ball will react when hit . The positioning of the cue ball in snooker is more important than the shot taken . Even as an above left knee amputee I still play both when possible . I also have a cue case with 2 full size cues one for Billiards which is over 50 years old and is slightly longer and heavier than my Snooker cue which is 30 years old . I have a set of Billiard balls in the case as well , so when going to a club , I can practice on my own without needing to get the balls from behind the bar .
The fact of all the space on the table makes it a creative game like the commentator said, and gives it imho a more “gymnastic” quality than other cue sports.
if you like this, you must try to play blillards without the holes, you use your cue call to hit the two other balls, some games you have to hit minum 3 sides to make a point
Wow, this is strange. I saw the three balls and read English billards and thought "What?! It is Carambole, French billard". But then I saw that the table has pockets. I used to play Carom Billards. I never came across English Billards. The rules of pointing is easier there. Every one player has the white cueball the other the yellow one and you must hit both other balls with your cueball in a shot. Actually doing it is quite harder. Nice times. I wasn't really good at it for winning any events but I had fun. Once I had the opportunity to come very close to a multiple World Cup Champion and to referee the match and having a really casual talk with him and his family. Dick Jaspers is really nice and chilled dude.
As a kid we had a crappy second hand six foot snooker table at home. It came with two cue balls - one with a red spot to distinguish it. All us kids played snooker, but I loved playing billiards with my dad. I still think that, of the two games, snooker is more interesting to watch and billiards is WAY more interesting to play, AND it really develops your positional play and understanding of angles.
There's a version of the game that's popular in Italy (and which I've seen live with people throwing the balls rather than using a cue, and have seen televised): ruclips.net/video/URp_9nO_QJ4/видео.html
My grandfather had a small billiards table, about 6 x 3 feet, and as a child I played every day with him. I think the yellow cue ball is new because, back in the day, both cue balls were white but one of them had a black spot. 995 of the time that was fine but occasionally the black spot would be on the bottom so one had to pay attention as to which ball was which. It's a great game due its simplicity - easier by far than snooker as there is not some much scope for strategy and planning.
watching this I was reminded that I used to play this as a boy when in the boy's brigade there were two tables in the back room of the churcvh hall where we used to meet ,you can really get the angles neatened up after a few games ,needless to say I hav'nt played it since ,that was 1951 52
Growing up in Australia, we played all three forms , what you call 8 ball, snooker and billiards …. We played billiards with a plain white ball, white ball with a black dot and red ball….. mostly on a full size table.
It's mind boggling for me too. As I'm from Canada (french part of it) Pool or billiard 8 ball or to some extend 9 ball, I know Snooker is a method that I've seen on TV a few decades ago. but the 3 ball game 1ST time hearing about it. Still it's fascinates me as well. Cheers from Quebec and have a nice weekend!!!! 🍻
In the 1980s (perhaps the early 90s) this was televised in the UK as an experiment. The only change to the traditional rules was that players could only play the same shot 8 times in a row (eg 8 cannons) - the organisers felt that there was no televisual appeal in allowing players to get the target ball and the opponent's cue ball wedged in the entrance to a corner pocket, then spend the whole time racking up thousands of cannons.
If you want to be even more confused, check out Carom Billiards aka French Billiards. 3 balls, no pockets. And also it's variant called Three-cushion Billiards.
Think about it, in snooker the difficult part is the hit a ball and position the que ball where you want it, it gives you that skill, it teaches you how to make the que ball go where you want it to do.
Billiards is a pretty rare game now, even in the UK, If you ask around in a bar in the UK pretty much everyone will have played pool quite a lot, most pubs have a coin operated pool table. About half the people will have had a go at snooker, and a few will be regular players, but you'll have to go to a lot of bars to find a billiards player. Pool is mostly played in pubs and bars, Snooker has dedicated snooker halls, and the occasional snooker hall or private club may have a billiards table.
Pocketing the Cueball in billiards is a celebrated shot called the 'IN OFF' meaning the cueball going into the pocket, off-of the red ball or yellow ball. However in snooker the 'IN OFF' or 'I WENT IN OFF' is a foul stroke, pocketing the Cueball by mistake. This occurs mainly when the cueball has to travel around the table for positioning on the next shot or having to power into the reds triangle, or having to play a safety shot ie, the cueball travelling from the 'safe' baulk area and trying to make its way back there, leaving the cueball vunerable.
My Dad played Billiards and taught us kids. Snooker is all skill but you have so many options if you get the cue ball slightly out of place (you have all the colours and multiple reds to go for), Billiards is the same skill but with added strategy and that need for precision. My dad could place the cue ball to just touch a grain of rice placed anywhere on the table, try it.
Essentially it's a very simple game, and far less complicated than snooker. My Father taught me to play billiards before we progressed onto snooker. Billiards (obviously) teaches you about cue-ball control, which is vital in snooker.
Hi Ian, When I first tried the cues were white and white with 1 small black spot. Too hard for me as you need very good ball control. Back last century, post WW2, there were 2 brothers that both played snooker. The younger Fred Davis became World champion, the older Joe was good but preferred Billiards and became World champion many times. There is a technique where you get the red & opponents cue ball close to the jaws of a bottom pocket so that you can just keep repeating hitting both balls without potting. Look at Bar Billiards: played in pubs & time limited before the bar come down & stops you retrieving potted balls. There are 2 versions, 3 pin and 4 pin( they look like mushrooms)
When I was just a spog growing up in Adelaide South Australia, had Gino's pool hall; 3 full size Snooker tables, 4 x 8 ball tables, pinball machines and table soccer. My local, the Norwood Snooker Hall, very scary; dark and threatening, never went again after 1st. time.(14 yrs old). The best was the Glynburn Slot car Raceway. No tables but mega mega fun. Fast cars, 1/24 th scale, 8 lanes, 10 yrs old. 10cents for 15 minutes.🎉😂😊
Here in Australia dad showed me this game as well as snooker when I was about 10 years old. this was on a 6 foot by 3 foot aluminium table Tried playing snooker at the local R.S.L. club , in the early 2000s talk about rusty could not work the angles anymore
There is also bar/pub billiards, something way different. There are many versions of it aswell. They have varied differences between them, depending on how far you go back and class system.
back in Uni, I often played UK pool. It was a set amount per game and the balls would stay inside the table if sunk, until another 10p/50p/£1 was put in the table to release the balls. So, to make my time at the table much cheaper, I invented a game where you had to pot your own balls, but only by cannons off your oponent's colour balls, and you also got 2 points for in-off'ing the cue ball. I play snooker now, and am not great at potting, but my cue-ball positioning and ability with all kinds of spin is pretty good....all down to learning how to pot the white or cannon it into other balls to pocket them.
Hi, The use of the yellow ball , replaces the tradritional white ball that has a black spot, which is the traditionally how its played . e.g two cue balls , one white , the other white with 2 coloured spots. Substituting the yellow for the white spot ball just makes it so easy to see, also you need to check out Bar billiards ly
Hi, I've played Billiards, it is very interesting, I was OK with what to do, not so good at doing it, my eye sights not so good at these distances 😞 On Pool being Chequers and Snooker being Chess. On this scale Billiards is like Go, looks so simple until you try. The French have a similar game, also billiards but the table has no pockets (same size as Snooker).
We used to play billiards a lot when I was a cub scout. In fact, we played it so much that it was eventually banned by the scoutmaster until and unless you had your 'sport' badge. Edited to add, half-size table btw.
In the netherlands we have a game called "potstoten" has a case on the table with holes and is played with two balls, red and white. Can be played with infinite players. If you hit the other ball its the next players turn. If you miss, you are out of the game. So the trick is to hit the other ball and make it as difficult for the next player. Most of the time money is in game, placed on the edges of the "pot". If you knock money off the pot you have to give a round of drinks. Winner of the game gets the pot (the money)
It's really just carambole billiards on a snooker table. Here in Amsterdam every café would have a billiards table and it's what everyone played, like pool over there. You score a point by hitting the red and the opponents ball with your cue ball, this is called a carambole or in English a cannon. There are different types of games, like where you have to hit at least three cushions with your cue ball while you make a carambole to score the point. Edit: and oh yes I've played it. I played 1st division snooker and when I heard of this had to try it. If you thought snooker is hard ... lol If you want to see some crazy stuff look up massé and piké billiards shots.
You should also check out a game called Bar Billiards that is an olde British pub game that has sadly died out. Best thing about it was the table is about the size of a pinball machine and you only shoot from one end so can fit a table in a really small space.
@3:55 I guess you mean the rules are harder? Well, as always the devil is in the detail. There's a lot you still don't know about snooker (and the casual watcher like myself doesn't necessarily need to know), like, what happens when a coloured ball got potted and is supposed to be put back on its spot, but it can't because the spot is blocked by other ball(s)? Or how can you win the frame with the black ball left on the table (other than the opponent conceding)?
We were in a Pub Snooker League. Our table was a Billiard table. Smaller pockets. Other pubs Tables' pockets were like chicks in a nest with open beaks.
This is an incredibly simple game which makes it the most difficult cue sport. You can learn the rules in 5 mins....but incredibly hard to play the best players can keep scoring points easily but when you start out it's tough as hell to score points consistently
If you get the red and your opponent's ball wedged in the mouth of the pocket you can score all night. Its good practice for positional play in Snooker.
Billiards is the oldest game out them all way before snooker and definitely before 8 or 9 ball pool. Dates back to 14th century where it was first played on lawn grass like croquet before it was adapted to the 1st table form of billiards, the game itself has had many forms before it reached original state in 19th century England.
I played billiards at university, it's a great game. There were three tables with coin operated lights so was an easy game to play for 30 minutes and have a definite winner. Originally there were two white balls, one with two tiny black dots on it, and a red ball. Nowadays you can play it on a snooker table using a white, yellow, and red ball. It teaches you a lot of skills that are useful for snooker and pool, especially cue ball control! There are other variations using tiny skittles as well as the balls. If pool is Checkers and snooker is Chess, maybe billiards is Go?
I've alwaus been aware that billliards existed, but never understood it until now. Always knew there was something about cannons, but it seems it doesn't work how I'd imagined. Honestly, probably prefer snooker. But then I watched a lot a snooker as a kid in the late 70s and early 80s, which was a golden era of interesting personality players in the british game. Hurricane Higgins, Steve Davis, Dennis Taylor.
Check out Torbjorn Lindahl playing 3-cushing where there is NO pockets. Just 3 balls to hit once + do 3 cushes aswell for every shot. How that mans brain works is beyond amazing. Many with me says he is to 3 cushing what Ronnie is to snooker. The GOAT ❤
A little billiards history for you, Joe Davis was without doubt the worlds greatest ever Billiards player, he was a bit usefull at snooker too! Every year the world championships were held at the same snooker hall in Blackpool. After winning the tournament he would play an exerbition game with viewing ellite such as the mayor and other dignatories in attendance against the Billiard hall manager and always lost! At that time females were not allowed into billiard halls unless they were as my Great Grandmother was, the billiard hall manager and unbeaten by Joe Davis!
You should watch Walter Lindrum 100 break with nursery cannons. People watch it and think it's easy but if they actually tried it they'd be out of position after one shot, even if they could get into position to play nursery cannons in the first place. 😁 There are no pockets on a French billiards table btw.
I’m not sure why they didn’t show it, there was a technique of getting the red ball and opposition cue ball next to the cushion and ‘shepherding’ or walking them around the table by rapid soft cannons, moving the balls by half an inch at a time. The tricky bit getting past the pockets without potting anything, lest the Red be placed back on its spot, the opposition ball removed from the table or your ball going back to the D. You could rack up hundreds of point in a row and the best controlled players created a boring game so they might have outlawed it. 😎😇
The outlawed part sounds vaguely familiar and I do remember seeing 'Shepherding' as well. Didn't know it was called that but I can understand why and why it was either banned or limited?
There are also limits to scoring "Hazards" (anything other than a Cannon) are limited to 15 consecutive scores "Cannons" are limited to 75 consecutive scores Obviously if you score the other type, then the count is reset Play Billiards for an hour and you will realise how good you have to be to even know about these rules
I have a set of billiard balls but they didn’t have those spots on, you have a white and two reds, the one red ball has a small black dot on it so look for some of the old players as I said and you think it’s hard like this, see how they played, the concentration was intense and the skill immense!
The real name is billiards, it's just that Americans have co-opted the name for any cue/table/ball game. Billiards was the first game of its type and was seen as an indoor version of golf. As in golf, each player has his individual ball. Like golf, if you pocket your ball, The cue ball is returned to the table just as a golf ball is teed up after it is played into the hole. after an in off, but the opponents cue ball is not returned if you pot it. In most of the world, this is known simply as billiards. It is not a popular spectator sport.
English Billiards is a rare sport where you play a match against the best in the world,imagine playing tennis against Federer or golf against Tiger,you won’t beat say David Causier but you’ll be in a position to see his brilliance.
When I used to play with my dad donkey's years ago apart from the red, both balls were white but one had a small black spot on it, this ball was referred to as spot.
Look out for Ronnie O'Sullivan's Four-part British documentary series, American Hustle (TV Mini Series 2017) where he travels American pool halls playing 8 and 9 ball
You might be interested in Walter Lindrum . World Billiard Champion from 1933 until he retired in 1950 . The bloke was that good they changed the rules because of him.
Three cushion billiards (carom) next. Three balls, no pockets and the cue ball has to hit 3 cushions during every shot. True artistry.
At least 3 cushions before hitting the second ball!
I love that challenging game.
We play it a lot in Belgium and The Netherlands.
It has European and world cup tournaments. Search on '3 cushion' for videos
I may possibly played it decades ago in Roemond, Netherlands and seen similar tables around Viersen in Germany (Dutch Border), along with a Billiard type game with 'Bouncy Mushrooms' in the centre of the table, also with no pockets.
@@johnp8131 i played a game in Italy with skittles, pockets with shutters, and no cues...you launched the ball with your hand, off the far cushion and tried to get nearest the white (it was a mix between crown green bowling, but with a bounce element, 10-pin bowling, and pool)
@@renevaanhold yep and i was playing from the age off 8 y old in belgium in our own pub and never stopped brilliant game
Decades ago (whilst still young), my father bought a 2nd hand snooker table. He proceeded to teach us kids snooker and billiards and we struggled mightily against him especially when playing billiards. He seemed just to be able to wander around blithely scoring mega points off cannons. What he'd forgotten to mention to us was that, whilst in the army, he'd become the army northern area billiards champion...
Nice😂
Yes! Back in the day, many army messes, across the ranks, had snooker tables, and both games were played. I know my dad spent many happy hours playing both games. Your dad must have put in a lot of practice, and been a champion of tactics.
Of course. "Forgotten".
my dad used to say he would give me a chance when i was young by playing left handed.. i did not know at the time he was actually left handed
@@R3ED3RAh, the Inigo Montoya gambit!
remember bar billiards? great pub game. Haven't seen one since the 80's.
There's a bar billiards table in the queen's head pub, Stansted mountfitchet, Essex.👍 Best pub game ever.
Earl of Beaconsfield, Cambridge
@@tallthinkevThe White Horse in Hertford, Herts had one in an upstairs room but it seemed to be more popular in Cambridgeshire. Back in the eighties and nineties I can think of three pubs in St Ives, Cambs that had them. Two have closed down but the Nelson's Head may still have theirs somewhere?
Haven’t seen bar billiards since the 1990s. Back then loads of pubs in Southampton had them. Especially the smaller venues where space was limited. Great game.
Haven't seen that for Years 😂.......little Mushrooms Isn't it?
There is a form where the two cue balls are both WHITE, but one of them has a Black Dot on it, to distinguish it from the other, whilst the third ball is BLACK. I never heard of this trio of colours before and I started playing in my teens, in the eaarly 70’s. What blows my mind about Billiards is that the top players were known for running up scores in the THOUSANDS, with breaks (turns) that could last hours long. Learning how to sink your cue ball off one of the others teaches you how to avoid doing this in games like Pool or Snooker. Learning to use light power on the cue ball and yet produce spin, which is an essential skill in Billiards, adds to your abilities in the other games as well of course. You should look up footage of Billiards masters like Walter Lindrum and Eddie Charlton online. They will absolutely bow your mind!
You need to remember that during the era of Walter Lindrum, TVs were in black & white and colours like red and yellow were not very easy to distinguish in greyscale, hence the spotted cue ball and the black object ball.
It is the same game, the colour of the balls and red dots were introduced for television about 20 years ago.
Billiards is excellent practice for snooker. Especially cue ball control.
English Billiards was the first cue sport game. The guys in the video are professionals. Steve Mifsud, wearing the purple shirt, is the current Australian Champion in both English Billiards and Snooker. He smashed me 850 to 80 in the first round of the Australian Open in 2023. Robby Foldvari, a good freind of mine, is a 3 time World Champion of English Billiards and won International Snooker titles, he has also won 8-ball, 9-ball and 10-ball championships and Captained the Australian team. Both players live in Melbourne.
Great video! I really enjoy the videos of you playing snooker as well. I hope you make more of them. It will take some time before you improve your play and strategy but you can start with the following principles in order of importance:
1. ALWAYS try to predict/influence where the cue ball will end up. You will not improve until you constantly have that in mind on EVERY shot! Experiment with different spins, angles, elevation and power to get more knowledge about the amazing things you can get the cue ball to do. Over time you will have the knowledge and experience to employ the right shot for the situation at hand.
2. It is too soon to think multiple shots in advance like pros do but start with thinking 1 shot in advance. On your current shot always think about the next shot after you pot and do your best to "set it up". Once you get the hang of it start thinking 2 shots in advance then 3,4 etc.
3. If you do not have a clear pot and/or streak of pots (Break) it is ALWAYS better to make a safety shot in a way that when the opponent comes to the table he has no shot or a very difficult shot which could force a mistake (hide the cue ball/object ball or at the very least put distance between them)
4. Take on pots that give you a chance to continue potting. Sometimes that means going for lower value colors but having an easy shot after that and continuing your break instead of going for higher value colors but having no shot after you pot.
Follow these principles as best as you can (especially the first one) and you will start improving quickly.
Breaks of over 1000 pts are not uncommon. The record Break is 4,137 pts (1900 consecutive scoring shots) and the guy that did that Break holds the record for the fastest Century Break also at 46 seconds. he's called Walter Lindrum.
Before a rule change at the start of the 1908 season to outlaw the craddle cannon the record break was 42,746
@@Jb-tl1yi That should be 499,135 in 1907 by Tom Reece, although not officially recognized.
There was a break of nearly 500,000 was recorded many years ago lasting 5 days.This led to a changing of the rules banning what was called the cradle cannon.
Love billiards , more complex than it looks.When in the snooker hall I will always finish my session with a game if billiards and much to my amusement a lot of snooker players have no idea what I am doing.
@@souptec I didn't put that in because it was an unoffical record played in an exhibition game, whereas the score I mentioned was recognised having being made in an offical match.
Billiards in my opinion is a far better game than the other cue sports. But I’m biased as I’ve played many World Billiard tour events over the years and run our local league. Glad you enjoyed your little intro 👍
This is new for me too, i played carambole biljart, it's also with three balls, but on a tables without pockets! 🤯🤷♂️✌🏼
Did you take a look at the original Billiard style, called Carambole Billiard, yet? Its another, very old type of billiard, with the main difference that the table has no pockets. There are 3 different larger balls, and you always have to touch the other 2 in each shot: Very hard, and requires a lot of experience, to make the best use of the cushions to get the cue ball go where you want it. Also very strategic.
There is also French billiards which is played with three balls, but there are no pockets.
The game consists of touching the white ball and that of the opponent with your ball.
The rules differ but the game is also difficult.
It’s popular in Asia as well, particularly Vietnam, most likely an influence from the French occupation of the region back in the day (also why there’s a strong French influence in Vietnamese food).
In “Little Saigon” in Las Vegas there’s a billiards hall that has a few regular pool tables and a whole line of carom tables. We visited one time (my son is fascinated with billiards) and we were mesmerized watching these old Asian guys playing carom with absolute ease.
@@vinsgraphics Well, Vietnam along with Cambodia and Laos was part of French Indochina before their independence.
Used to play Billiards with my Father back in the seventies onwards. We would play one frame of Snooker and then finish off with Billiards as we would have 45 minutes allocated to the table as it was usually insufficient time for two frames of Snooker?
Usually both players have their own cue ball, one plain white and the other white with a small black spot on it and one red impact/object ball. The yellow cue ball seems to be a newish thing?
Seen Billiards in the Netherlands, Germany etc on a smaller table (large pool table size) with no pockets and another in the Netherlands with immoveable cushioned pegs in the middle that the balls bounce off! Cannons only one would presume?
We also have 'Bar Billiards' in the UK, which you should take a look at. The 'Bar' is a timed stop bar, that stops the impact balls returning after a timed period. The cue ball returns as it's fractionally smaller, as on most pool tables. Played very gently with ultra tight round 'Pockets' and 'Mushroom' shaped pegs which can be knocked over for penalties. Rare to see these in pubs today, back in the eighties it was quite popular in some Counties around London and there were many Bar Billiards inter pub competitions.
May be an Idea to look at 'British Pub Games', which isn't just Pool and Darts, even today?
I was going to say the same, never seen a Yellow Cue Ball. We used to play (occasionally) on a snooker table. It had the standard Snooker balls, PLUS a second Cue ball that had a spot. To play Billiards you took one red, the Cue Ball and the Second Cue Ball (with the spot). I didn't play it much, so never really got into the scoring or that skill of placing balls correctly, though I imagine if you were resonable at Billiards, then you would have the skill to play Snooker better, being able to place the balls where you wanted them with more skill. Some of the older Snooker players when it became popular on TV were mostly Billiard players I believe which was why they were so good. - I suppose if you think about it, if you only have Snooker balls then you can still play Billiards, just use the Red, White, and Yellow balls. I seem to remember that often when playing Snooker, we would "string" for Break rather than tossing a coin
I used to play it all the time as a kid, I had small 6' table at home and it's good practise for making your positioning more precise,
Dave Causier is great to watch when it comes to top-class English billiards. Plays at less than 10 seconds a shot, and is one of the best players in the world.
This is the game I first learned (from an old guy aged 91) back when I was at junior prep in the 1950s. Back then, though, there was no yellow cue ball. There was a red ball, a white cue ball, and a spot cue ball (white with a little black dot). This game was popular during the Raj, where my grampa learned it at the United Services Club in Shimla.
The demonstration is with Robbie Folvari who has been atop snooker and billiards player, was Billiards World Champion, the other player is Steve Mifsud multiple Australian and Oceania champion snooker player.
Wait until he finds out about 5 pin billiards.
Billiards is the original of all these table ball games. Snooker was created by troops in British India to add excitement to the game, because they decided Billiards was too slow.
Snooker halls in the UK are usually called Billiard halls, with Billiards tables, on which Snooker, or Billiards, may be played. As with most games & sports invented in the UK, the Americans had to devise a simpler version, so they created 8 ball Pool, on a much smaller table, that doesn't require the skill or finesse of Snooker, & they certainly don't seem to have had the patience for Billiards. Baseball was based on the schoolyard game of Rounders, which never had an adult version in the UK, but was played by children instead of the adult game of Cricket.
The American Colonists did play Cricket, taken as part of British culture, but as the ground for a good wicket pitch has to be carefully prepared, it was easier to arrange a Rounders field, where this is less critical, because the ball is not bounced in bowling as it is in cricket, & the scoring of runs is much more straight-forward. This origin can just still be seen by the fact that the distance between Bases is the same as that between Wickets in Cricket, that is1Chain, or 22 yards. The need for easy setup was especially true during the Civil War, where games were quickly arranged in mobile Army camps. So Rounders, renamed at some time Base Ball became the preferred summer game in the US. American Football is a version of English Rugby, heavily regulated & formalized so as to have almost totally wrecked the game, taking out the spontaneousness & excitement, to replace it with stop-start set plays. I have no idea why regular football never took root in the US, it is just strange. It may be, as in the UK, that all these games were the pastimes of the wealth leisured classes, mostly come out of the private schools, where the rules & regulation developed, while football was a more informal, less disciplined sport of the working man, so to be shunned by those who had the means to create officially sanctioned gentlemanly pursuits. Only Basketball appears to have been a game created from scratch in the US, with all others coming out of the UK, or other countries.
Technically basketball was invented by a Canadian (albeit one working at a US college).
Snooker hall's in the UK are generally called 'snooker clubs' and I have never seen anyone play billiards in one, hardly anyone plays billiards in the UK, it's more popular in places like Pakistan these days.
Even Basket ball comes from English Netball played by Women & Children ??
You need to get some old footage of the great Joe Davies and his brother, but Joe was world champion at both Snooker and Billiards the ultimate days of the gentleman’s sport, Joe one of the most famous players of his generation, but also known by every snooker player!
In Europe and many other countries in the world, the traditional form of biljard is played with three ball but with no holes at the sides.
The player has to hit the other two balls with his ball. If he misses, his opponent can play for points.
There’s a variant, which is more difficult but much more interesting to watch, is where your ball has to hit the other two balls but before your balls hits the last ball, your ball must have hit at least three different sides
I played both variants a lot.
Interestingly all these games are derived from skittles (an early form of bowling still played today in pubs, but in the Middle Ages more commonly in church!) The green baize cloth on a snooker table is a reminder of the grass outside, i.e. the tabletop games were invented so people could keep playing indoors during cold winters. Pockets eventually came about because they were easier than putting pins to hit on an indoor table. Interestingly bagatelle, pinball and pachinko are all also derived from billiards; bizarrely, the French in the 18th century called bagatelle "Japanese billiards", just because 'Japanese' meant 'exotic, new, funky' and then centuries later the real Japanese go mad for pachinko, a derivative of it via America!
I grew up playing English 8 Ball Pool. That will be a good game for you to look at too. Especially Blackball rules events and international rules events. I play Blackball internationally for Wales.
I also played Chinese Pool now known as Heyball. Also another great cue sport..
I took up snooker last year and love it. Played 1 season for a team in the league and made a singles final in my first Snooker season.
And also recently started playing English Billiards and got my first tournament in July at Billiards. I love all Cue sports.
Great comments. Decades ago we had a 12x6 table in our lunch room. Most of us played snooker and billiards. Was a great experience. I most to a different location ,no table.
The White, Yellow and Red ball combo is new to me. I have always known billiards to consist of a White, a White with a dot, and a Black ball.
Three colours have been used for decades now
@@mrdfw666 Yeah, I'm 71 and haven't played billiards for 50+ years 😁
When I was quite young, my friend's dad had a half size table, which had covers so it could be used as the dining table too. We played billiards a lot (two white balls, one with a spot) as it was some time later that they got a set of snooker balls. Some shots were tricky because the room was quite small, and other furniture got in the way of the blunt end of the cue.
Walter Lindrum was generally regarded as the best ever "Billiards" (the full size English table variety) player. He was so good, they had to change the rules in an effort to stop his dominance of the game. It didn't work though. Check out the Lindrum documentary here on You Tube if you have time.
Also they used to play to a point value of like 500 . They also used to be able to trap the two object balls in the pocket mouth and play countless cannons off them . Fred Davis and Harold Lindrum where multiple World Champions . Watch some of the old black and white footage of them playing you will be amazed at the speed they played at . They show how simple but skilled based the game is . Knowing how much side spin or top or bottom or a combination of them to pocket and position your opponents ball and the red where you can score the most with the least amount of effort . Soft gentle shots will always help but you will rarely hit it hard .
I am 76 now. 60 years ago or more I spent many happy hours at Elizabeth House in Hurlock Street, Highbury, Isl;ington playing billiards. We weren't sure of the rules but did the best we could. I'm delighted to see that they are still going strong. The Youth Club is free for all young people aged 11 to 18 although the hours seem a bit more limited than before.
The thing about Billiards is that you learn what is in off with the cue ball . The game of snooker and pool becomes so much easier because you know when the ball will travel into the pocket .
I played competition Billiards and Snooker and my snooker game was so much better because you know how the cue ball will react when hit . The positioning of the cue ball in snooker is more important than the shot taken . Even as an above left knee amputee I still play both when possible . I also have a cue case with 2 full size cues one for Billiards which is over 50 years old and is slightly longer and heavier than my Snooker cue which is 30 years old . I have a set of Billiard balls in the case as well , so when going to a club , I can practice on my own without needing to get the balls from behind the bar .
The fact of all the space on the table makes it a creative game like the commentator said, and gives it imho a more “gymnastic” quality than other cue sports.
if you like this, you must try to play blillards without the holes, you use your cue call to hit the two other balls, some games you have to hit minum 3 sides to make a point
Wow, this is strange.
I saw the three balls and read English billards and thought "What?! It is Carambole, French billard". But then I saw that the table has pockets.
I used to play Carom Billards. I never came across English Billards.
The rules of pointing is easier there. Every one player has the white cueball the other the yellow one and you must hit both other balls with your cueball in a shot.
Actually doing it is quite harder.
Nice times. I wasn't really good at it for winning any events but I had fun.
Once I had the opportunity to come very close to a multiple World Cup Champion and to referee the match and having a really casual talk with him and his family.
Dick Jaspers is really nice and chilled dude.
As a kid we had a crappy second hand six foot snooker table at home. It came with two cue balls - one with a red spot to distinguish it. All us kids played snooker, but I loved playing billiards with my dad.
I still think that, of the two games, snooker is more interesting to watch and billiards is WAY more interesting to play, AND it really develops your positional play and understanding of angles.
There's a version of the game that's popular in Italy (and which I've seen live with people throwing the balls rather than using a cue, and have seen televised): ruclips.net/video/URp_9nO_QJ4/видео.html
My grandfather had a small billiards table, about 6 x 3 feet, and as a child I played every day with him. I think the yellow cue ball is new because, back in the day, both cue balls were white but one of them had a black spot. 995 of the time that was fine but occasionally the black spot would be on the bottom so one had to pay attention as to which ball was which. It's a great game due its simplicity - easier by far than snooker as there is not some much scope for strategy and planning.
Next up, Carom billiards (carambole)? No pockets on the table. And maybe after that: Golfbiljart :)
Billiards predates snooker and pool
watching this I was reminded that I used to play this as a boy when in the boy's brigade there were two tables in the back room of the churcvh hall where we used to meet ,you can really get the angles neatened up after a few games ,needless to say I hav'nt played it since ,that was 1951 52
Growing up in Australia, we played all three forms , what you call 8 ball, snooker and billiards …. We played billiards with a plain white ball, white ball with a black dot and red ball….. mostly on a full size table.
It's mind boggling for me too. As I'm from Canada (french part of it) Pool or billiard 8 ball or to some extend 9 ball, I know Snooker is a method that I've seen on TV a few decades ago. but the 3 ball game 1ST time hearing about it. Still it's fascinates me as well.
Cheers from Quebec and have a nice weekend!!!! 🍻
In the 1980s (perhaps the early 90s) this was televised in the UK as an experiment. The only change to the traditional rules was that players could only play the same shot 8 times in a row (eg 8 cannons) - the organisers felt that there was no televisual appeal in allowing players to get the target ball and the opponent's cue ball wedged in the entrance to a corner pocket, then spend the whole time racking up thousands of cannons.
In Spain usually we learn to play the French Billiard (3 balls) . I play since I was 16 years old .
If you want to be even more confused, check out Carom Billiards aka French Billiards. 3 balls, no pockets. And also it's variant called Three-cushion Billiards.
Think about it, in snooker the difficult part is the hit a ball and position the que ball where you want it, it gives you that skill, it teaches you how to make the que ball go where you want it to do.
Billiards is a pretty rare game now, even in the UK, If you ask around in a bar in the UK pretty much everyone will have played pool quite a lot, most pubs have a coin operated pool table. About half the people will have had a go at snooker, and a few will be regular players, but you'll have to go to a lot of bars to find a billiards player.
Pool is mostly played in pubs and bars, Snooker has dedicated snooker halls, and the occasional snooker hall or private club may have a billiards table.
Pocketing the Cueball in billiards is a celebrated shot called the 'IN OFF' meaning the cueball going into the pocket, off-of the red ball or yellow ball. However in snooker the 'IN OFF' or 'I WENT IN OFF' is a foul stroke, pocketing the Cueball by mistake. This occurs mainly when the cueball has to travel around the table for positioning on the next shot or having to power into the reds triangle, or having to play a safety shot ie, the cueball travelling from the 'safe' baulk area and trying to make its way back there, leaving the cueball vunerable.
My Dad played Billiards and taught us kids.
Snooker is all skill but you have so many options if you get the cue ball slightly out of place (you have all the colours and multiple reds to go for), Billiards is the same skill but with added strategy and that need for precision.
My dad could place the cue ball to just touch a grain of rice placed anywhere on the table, try it.
I know exactly what you mean about being confused. I'd recommend watching something easier, like how to play Cricket.
Or 421 with 3 dies 🤣🤣🤣 or even Yan with 5dies
Essentially it's a very simple game, and far less complicated than snooker. My Father taught me to play billiards before we progressed onto snooker. Billiards (obviously) teaches you about cue-ball control, which is vital in snooker.
Hi Ian, When I first tried the cues were white and white with 1 small black spot. Too hard for me as you need very good ball control.
Back last century, post WW2, there were 2 brothers that both played snooker. The younger Fred Davis became World champion, the older Joe was good but preferred Billiards and became World champion many times.
There is a technique where you get the red & opponents cue ball close to the jaws of a bottom pocket so that you can just keep repeating hitting both balls without potting.
Look at Bar Billiards: played in pubs & time limited before the bar come down & stops you retrieving potted balls. There are 2 versions, 3 pin and 4 pin( they look like mushrooms)
When I was just a spog growing up in Adelaide South Australia, had Gino's pool hall; 3 full size Snooker tables, 4 x 8 ball tables, pinball machines and table soccer. My local, the Norwood Snooker Hall, very scary; dark and threatening, never went again after 1st. time.(14 yrs old). The best was the Glynburn Slot car Raceway. No tables but mega mega fun. Fast cars, 1/24 th scale, 8 lanes, 10 yrs old. 10cents for 15 minutes.🎉😂😊
Here in Australia dad showed me this game as well as snooker when I was about 10 years old.
this was on a 6 foot by 3 foot aluminium table
Tried playing snooker at the local R.S.L. club , in the early 2000s talk about rusty could not work the angles anymore
There is also bar/pub billiards, something way different. There are many versions of it aswell. They have varied differences between them, depending on how far you go back and class system.
back in Uni, I often played UK pool. It was a set amount per game and the balls would stay inside the table if sunk, until another 10p/50p/£1 was put in the table to release the balls.
So, to make my time at the table much cheaper, I invented a game where you had to pot your own balls, but only by cannons off your oponent's colour balls, and you also got 2 points for in-off'ing the cue ball.
I play snooker now, and am not great at potting, but my cue-ball positioning and ability with all kinds of spin is pretty good....all down to learning how to pot the white or cannon it into other balls to pocket them.
Hi, The use of the yellow ball , replaces the tradritional white ball that has a black spot, which is the traditionally how its played . e.g two cue balls , one white , the other white with 2 coloured spots. Substituting the yellow for the white spot ball just makes it so easy to see, also you need to check out Bar billiards
ly
Furthering your point, I believe it happened for the sake of televising games.
Hi,
I've played Billiards, it is very interesting, I was OK with what to do, not so good at doing it, my eye sights not so good at these distances 😞
On Pool being Chequers and Snooker being Chess.
On this scale Billiards is like Go, looks so simple until you try.
The French have a similar game, also billiards but the table has no pockets (same size as Snooker).
Billiards is very skillful but confusing I'd stick to Snooker if i was you, great video keep up the good work.
We used to play billiards a lot when I was a cub scout. In fact, we played it so much that it was eventually banned by the scoutmaster until and unless you had your 'sport' badge. Edited to add, half-size table btw.
In the netherlands we have a game called "potstoten" has a case on the table with holes and is played with two balls, red and white. Can be played with infinite players. If you hit the other ball its the next players turn. If you miss, you are out of the game. So the trick is to hit the other ball and make it as difficult for the next player. Most of the time money is in game, placed on the edges of the "pot". If you knock money off the pot you have to give a round of drinks. Winner of the game gets the pot (the money)
It's really just carambole billiards on a snooker table. Here in Amsterdam every café would have a billiards table and it's what everyone played, like pool over there.
You score a point by hitting the red and the opponents ball with your cue ball, this is called a carambole or in English a cannon.
There are different types of games, like where you have to hit at least three cushions with your cue ball while you make a carambole to score the point.
Edit: and oh yes I've played it. I played 1st division snooker and when I heard of this had to try it. If you thought snooker is hard ... lol
If you want to see some crazy stuff look up massé and piké billiards shots.
Stringing is often how it’s done in professional 9-ball pool too. Always quite liked the idea of carom where there’s no pockets
You should also check out a game called Bar Billiards that is an olde British pub game that has sadly died out. Best thing about it was the table is about the size of a pinball machine and you only shoot from one end so can fit a table in a really small space.
@3:55 I guess you mean the rules are harder? Well, as always the devil is in the detail. There's a lot you still don't know about snooker (and the casual watcher like myself doesn't necessarily need to know), like, what happens when a coloured ball got potted and is supposed to be put back on its spot, but it can't because the spot is blocked by other ball(s)? Or how can you win the frame with the black ball left on the table (other than the opponent conceding)?
Billiards really is THE best way to practice for snooker or pool, it teaches the fine points and accuracy of cue ball control like no other game.
We were in a Pub Snooker League. Our table was a Billiard table. Smaller pockets. Other pubs Tables' pockets were like chicks in a nest with open beaks.
Tom Reece (1873-1953), compiled a record break of 499,135 points over a period of five weeks in Soho, London.
Billiards is a great game in itself, but it's also good snooker practice because it improves your cue ball control so well.
This is an incredibly simple game which makes it the most difficult cue sport. You can learn the rules in 5 mins....but incredibly hard to play the best players can keep scoring points easily but when you start out it's tough as hell to score points consistently
If you get the red and your opponent's ball wedged in the mouth of the pocket you can score all night. Its good practice for positional play in Snooker.
That was how players like Walter Lindrum scored hundred of thousands of points in a single break.
Billiards is the oldest game out them all way before snooker and definitely before 8 or 9 ball pool. Dates back to 14th century where it was first played on lawn grass like croquet before it was adapted to the 1st table form of billiards, the game itself has had many forms before it reached original state in 19th century England.
I played billiards at university, it's a great game. There were three tables with coin operated lights so was an easy game to play for 30 minutes and have a definite winner.
Originally there were two white balls, one with two tiny black dots on it, and a red ball. Nowadays you can play it on a snooker table using a white, yellow, and red ball.
It teaches you a lot of skills that are useful for snooker and pool, especially cue ball control!
There are other variations using tiny skittles as well as the balls.
If pool is Checkers and snooker is Chess, maybe billiards is Go?
Definitely Go.
I was a member of a snooker club here in Perth when I was younger back in the early 1970's.
pls look into Three-cushion billiards, also called three-cushion carom. Frédéric Caudron or even better, Raymond Ceulemans, the GOAT.
You have to see Italian billiard (CARAMBOLA) with skittles.....very difficult and fun
I'm a Brit, and I'm confused as well 😂. I love snooker. But I've never watched billiards before.
I've alwaus been aware that billliards existed, but never understood it until now. Always knew there was something about cannons, but it seems it doesn't work how I'd imagined.
Honestly, probably prefer snooker. But then I watched a lot a snooker as a kid in the late 70s and early 80s, which was a golden era of interesting personality players in the british game. Hurricane Higgins, Steve Davis, Dennis Taylor.
Cannot be long before you run into 3-cusion biljarts. The king of biljartgames in my opinion.
I had a friend who was pretty good at billiards and played in the local leagues - he once beat the reigning world champion in a match.
Check out Torbjorn Lindahl playing 3-cushing where there is NO pockets. Just 3 balls to hit once + do 3 cushes aswell for every shot. How that mans brain works is beyond amazing. Many with me says he is to 3 cushing what Ronnie is to snooker. The GOAT ❤
If you have time, there is also a form of billiards called:
Danish five-pin billiards.
There are 3 balls and 5 pins on the table... 🙂
That would be great. Finding English languages videos about Danish five-pin billards is kinda difficult though.
@@Foobarski Just search for "Danish 5 pin billiards" and
there are several videos to choose from both with rules and matches.
I can now see why the old snooker players were so good like Ray Reardon and Denis Taylor who both started by playing billiards
Billiards is an essential part of training if you want to be a snooker player
A little billiards history for you, Joe Davis was without doubt the worlds greatest ever Billiards player, he was a bit usefull at snooker too! Every year the world championships were held at the same snooker hall in Blackpool. After winning the tournament he would play an exerbition game with viewing ellite such as the mayor and other dignatories in attendance against the Billiard hall manager and always lost! At that time females were not allowed into billiard halls unless they were as my Great Grandmother was, the billiard hall manager and unbeaten by Joe Davis!
Never heard of Walter Lindrum,the actual Greatest player in history!!!!
You should watch Walter Lindrum 100 break with nursery cannons. People watch it and think it's easy but if they actually tried it they'd be out of position after one shot, even if they could get into position to play nursery cannons in the first place. 😁
There are no pockets on a French billiards table btw.
Wait till you see carom billiards.. 3 balls no pockets 😂
I’m not sure why they didn’t show it, there was a technique of getting the red ball and opposition cue ball next to the cushion and ‘shepherding’ or walking them around the table by rapid soft cannons, moving the balls by half an inch at a time. The tricky bit getting past the pockets without potting anything, lest the Red be placed back on its spot, the opposition ball removed from the table or your ball going back to the D. You could rack up hundreds of point in a row and the best controlled players created a boring game so they might have outlawed it. 😎😇
The outlawed part sounds vaguely familiar and I do remember seeing 'Shepherding' as well. Didn't know it was called that but I can understand why and why it was either banned or limited?
Tree cushion, or : pomerans, or ; driebanden in dutch is much more fun to watch
There are also limits to scoring
"Hazards" (anything other than a Cannon) are limited to 15 consecutive scores
"Cannons" are limited to 75 consecutive scores
Obviously if you score the other type, then the count is reset
Play Billiards for an hour and you will realise how good you have to be to even know about these rules
I have a set of billiard balls but they didn’t have those spots on, you have a white and two reds, the one red ball has a small black dot on it so look for some of the old players as I said and you think it’s hard like this, see how they played, the concentration was intense and the skill immense!
The real name is billiards, it's just that Americans have co-opted the name for any cue/table/ball game. Billiards was the first game of its type and was seen as an indoor version of golf. As in golf, each player has his individual ball. Like golf, if you pocket your ball, The cue ball is returned to the table just as a golf ball is teed up after it is played into the hole. after an in off, but the opponents cue ball is not returned if you pot it. In most of the world, this is known simply as billiards. It is not a popular spectator sport.
Now you need to check out Carom Billiards.
English Billiards is a rare sport where you play a match against the best in the world,imagine playing tennis against Federer or golf against Tiger,you won’t beat say David Causier but you’ll be in a position to see his brilliance.
Never played billiards, but look a good game for getting familiar with angles and cue ball control.
When I used to play with my dad donkey's years ago apart from the red, both balls were white but one had a small black spot on it, this ball was referred to as spot.
Bar Billiards is quite interesting, with skittles and holes on the table.
If you can get your head round it, billiards is a fascinating game to play and watch. Strategy and guile.
Look out for Ronnie O'Sullivan's Four-part British documentary series, American Hustle (TV Mini Series 2017) where he travels American pool halls playing 8 and 9 ball
Artistic billiards will blow your mind!